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London Musicals 1995-1999.pub - Over The Footlights

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AIN’T MISBEHAVIN’ (1 st Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Tricycle <strong>The</strong>atre, January 9 th - 25 th February)<br />

Transferred to Lyric <strong>The</strong>atre March 13 th (232 Performances)<br />

Music & Lyrics: Various<br />

Book: Murray Horweitz & Richard Maltby Jr<br />

Director: Gillian Gregory & Nicholas Kent<br />

Choreographer: Gillian Gregory<br />

Musical Director: Clement Ishmael<br />

Cast: Ray Shell, Debby Bishop, Dawn<br />

Hope, Melanie Marshall, Sean Palmer.<br />

Notes: This revival was in its original<br />

“chamber” style rather than the large-scale<br />

production staged at Her Majesty’s in 1979.<br />

It received a number of rave notices for<br />

Sean Palmer, hailed as an exceptional bright<br />

new star.<br />

See Original <strong>London</strong> production: Her<br />

Majesty’s, March 1979<br />

Sean Palmer<br />

<strong>1995</strong><br />

1<br />

MAMA I WANT TO SING<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Cambridge <strong>The</strong>atre, February 1 st (149 Performances)<br />

Transferred to Gielgud <strong>The</strong>atre, June 13 th (38 Performances)<br />

Music: Rudolph V Hawkins, Wesley Naylor & Doris Troy<br />

Book & Lyrics: Vy Higginsen & Ken Wydro<br />

Director: Vy Higginsen & Ken Wydro<br />

Choreographer: Richard Sampson<br />

Musical Director: Bazil Meade<br />

Cast: Doris Troy (Mama Winter), Howard McCrary (Reverend Winter).<br />

Stacy Francis (Young Doris), Joanne Campbell (Narrator),<br />

Chaka Khan (Sister Carrie), Charles Stewart (Minister of Music)<br />

Songs: You Are My Child, Just One Look, Just follow Your Dream, Precious<br />

Lord, God Will Be, Faith Can Move a Mountain<br />

Story: Set in Harlem in the late 1940s and early 1950s this is the story of the real-life soul singer, Doris Troy,<br />

whose pastor father encouraged her to follow her dream of becoming a gospel singer, whilst her mother, Mama<br />

Winter, tried hard to persuade her to avoid the Apollo <strong>The</strong>ater crowd and to stop idolising the worldly music of<br />

pop singers. A radio-show narrator tells her story, her great success and her eventual return to her local<br />

community to found a children’s home, and old people’s centre and a “Fame” school for musicaslly talented<br />

children – all named after her beloved Mama.<br />

Notes: This show held the record as the longest running allblack<br />

off-Broadway show, running for eight years, playing to<br />

over 3 million people and taking something like £38 million at<br />

the box office in stagings through Europe, Asia and Japan.<br />

<strong>The</strong> part of Doris Troy’s mother was played by Doris Troy<br />

herself, and the company included a 15 voice gospel choir.<br />

Generally the critics hated it! “<strong>Over</strong>-amplified, over-long,<br />

under-written, uninspired” (Sunday Express), “you end up<br />

aching for Motown and wishing the show had been about<br />

Diana Ross. Or even Jonathan Ross” (Michael Coveney in<br />

“<strong>The</strong> Observer”. )<br />

Doris Troy as Mama Winter


CLOSER THAN EVER<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Bridewell <strong>The</strong>atre, February 9 th to March 4 th<br />

Music: David Shire<br />

Lyrics: Richard Maltby Jr<br />

Book: Steven Scott-Smith<br />

Director: Clive Paget<br />

Musical Director: Jo Last<br />

<strong>1995</strong><br />

2<br />

Photo by Cullen Henshaw<br />

Cast: Lyanna Iveson, Vicky Simmonds,<br />

Richard Tremblay, Clive Paget<br />

Songs: She Loves Me Not, You Want to Be My<br />

Friend?, What am I Doin'?, <strong>The</strong> Sound of Muzak, One of<br />

the Good Guys, Life Story, I Wouldn't Go Back,<br />

Fandango, Another Wedding Song, <strong>The</strong> March of Time,<br />

Fathers of Fathers, I've Been Here Before, Closer Than<br />

Ever<br />

Lyanna Iveson & Clive Paget<br />

Story: This is a sung-through musical revue in two<br />

acts described as a "bookless book musical". It features<br />

self-contained songs which deal with such topics as security, growing old, mid-life-crises, second marriages,<br />

working couples, and unrequited love. Some of the songs were written for but not used in earlier Maltby and<br />

Shire shows, and many were based on the real-life experiences of their friends, or stories told to them.<br />

Notes: It won an award as the Best Off-Broadway Musical and several other nominations at its 1989 premiere,<br />

and ran for 312 performances in New York.<br />

ZORRO THE MUSICAL!<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: <strong>The</strong>atre Royal, Stratford East February 13 th – March 25 th<br />

Music: Master of the Zarzuela<br />

Additional Music: Warren Wills<br />

Book & Lyrics: Ken Hill<br />

Director: Ken Hill & Peter Rankin<br />

Choreographer: Imogen Clare<br />

Musical Director: Warren Wills<br />

Cast: Bogdan Kominowski (Don José/Zorro), Andrew Secombe (Governor Maté),<br />

Toni Palmer (Maria), Michael N. Harnour (Pirate Lafitte),<br />

Sylvester McCoy (Bernardo), Gary Lyons, Siobhan McCarthy<br />

Songs: I Sold my Soul to the Devil Long Ago,<br />

Story: Don José has been exiled from his native Spain for no good reason, and ends up in Southern California<br />

in 19 th Century Spanish colonial times. His enemies are the villainous Governor Maté, who dreams of<br />

becoming America’s first Emperor, with his randy wife, Maria as Empress, and the pirate Lafitte, who eats the<br />

odd budgerigar alive. Pretending to be a bewigged fop, accompanied by his mute servant, Bernardo, Don José<br />

is able to lead a double life – for his real role is as the masked Zorro, defying the villains, assisting the poor,<br />

and pitting his gipsy wits against the villains, and his romantic ardour towards Isabella, the love of his life.<br />

Notes: This was a mixture of folk-opera and political pantomime, making heavy use of zarzuela music (a kind<br />

of traditional comic Spanish operetta) by 19 th century Spanish composers. Ken Hill had been fighting cancer<br />

for several years and sadly died during rehearsals for this show.


THE KING AND I (4th Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Freemason’s Hall, May 17 th – 20th<br />

Music: Richard Rodgers<br />

Lyrics & Book: Oscar Hammerstein II<br />

Director: John Gardyne<br />

Choreographer: Sean Walsh<br />

Musical Director: Peter Ash<br />

<strong>1995</strong><br />

3<br />

Cast: Liz Robertson (Anna), Irek Mukhamedov (King),<br />

Shezwae Powell (Lady Thiang), Deborah Myers (Tuptim),<br />

Mario Frangoulis (Lun Tha)<br />

This was a special festival production for five performances<br />

only, staged in the magnificent Freemason’s Hall as part of<br />

the Covent Garden Festival. It was especially notable for<br />

the appearance of Irek Mukhamedov, the ex-Bolshoi and<br />

Royal Ballet’s great solo dancer.<br />

Notes: See original <strong>London</strong> production, Drury Lane, June 1953<br />

First revival: Adelphi, October 1973<br />

Second revival: <strong>London</strong> Palladium, June 1979<br />

Third revival: Sadler’s Wells, February & June 1991<br />

Irek Mukhamedov<br />

Photo by Photographers Direct<br />

THE HOT MIKADO<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Queen’s <strong>The</strong>atre, May 24 th (101 Performances)<br />

Music: Sir Arthur Sullivan & Rob Bowman<br />

Book & Lyrics: David H. Bell<br />

Director-Choreographer: David H. Bell<br />

Musical Director: Simon Lee<br />

Cast: Sharon Benson (Katisha), Lawrence Hamilton (<strong>The</strong> Mikado),<br />

Paul Manuel (Nanki-Poo),<br />

Ross Lehman (Ko-Ko),<br />

Richard Lloyd King (Pooh-Bah),<br />

Veronica Hart (Peep Bo),<br />

Paulette Ivory (Yum-Yum),<br />

Alison Jiear (Pitti-Sing),<br />

Neil Couperthwaite (Junior)<br />

Story: Set in the late 1930s-early 1940s, the show abandoned<br />

traditional Japanese costumes for snappy zoot suits and skintight<br />

jitterbug skirts, and added elements of gospel, jazz, blues<br />

and swing and an Andrews Sisters send-up to the basic story<br />

of the original Gilbert & Sullivan story.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> production had been a success in Washington and<br />

other US cities (though it had not played Broadway) and came<br />

to <strong>London</strong> with some of the original cast. However it failed to<br />

catch on in the West End and closed after 12 weeks.<br />

Photo by Michael Le Poer Trench


ROCKY HORROR SHOW (3 rd Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Duke of York’s <strong>The</strong>atre, May 30 th (127 Performances)<br />

Music & Lyrics: Richard O’Brien<br />

Director: Christopher Malcolm<br />

Choreographer: Stuart Hopps<br />

Musical Director: Dave Brown<br />

Producer: Christopher Malcolm, Rocky Horror <strong>London</strong> Ltd<br />

<strong>1995</strong><br />

4<br />

Cast: Nicholas Parsons (Narrator), Robin Cousins (Frank-n-Furter),<br />

Tony Dowding (Rocky Horror), Paul Collis (Brad), Joanne Farrell (Janet),<br />

Vas Constanti (Riff-Raff), Corrina Powlesland (Magenta),<br />

Rebecca Vere (Columbia), Nicholas Pound(Eddie/Dr Scott)<br />

This was back in the West End a year after its previous revival – again for a<br />

limited season.<br />

Notes: See original production: Upstairs (Royal Court), June 19 th 1973<br />

Transferred to the Comedy <strong>The</strong>atre, April 1979;<br />

First revival: Piccadilly <strong>The</strong>atre, July 1990<br />

Second revival: Duke of York’s <strong>The</strong>atre, June 1994<br />

Nicholas Parsons<br />

Photo by Rex Features<br />

THE RISE & FALL OF THE CITY OF MAHAGONNY<br />

(1 st Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Coliseum, June 8 th – July 30 th (Repertoire & Limited season)<br />

Music: Kurt Weill<br />

Book & Lyrics: Bertolt Brecht<br />

English translation: Michael Feingold<br />

Director: Declan Donnellan<br />

Choreographer: Jane Gibson<br />

Musical Director: Sian Edwards/James Holmes<br />

Cast: Robert Brubaker (Jim), John Daszak (Jake), Ricardo Simonetti (Bill),<br />

Richard Angas (Joe), Lesley Garrett (Jenny), Sally Burgess (Widow Begbick),<br />

Adrian Thompson (Fatty), Brian Matthews (Trinity Moses)<br />

Songs: O Moon of Alabama, Benares Song, Mandalay Song<br />

Story: Having escaped from the police, the Widow Begbick, Trinity Moses and Fatty end up in a desolate<br />

place and decide to create a true paradise of their own, a city called Mahagonny, where sex, gambling and<br />

money are available for all. <strong>The</strong> city grows, and includes Jenny, a young prostitute, and four lumberjacks, Jim,<br />

Jake, Bill and Joe. When their new city is threatened by a destructive hurricane, and saved at the last minute by<br />

a change of course, life takes on an even more frantic pace: indulgence, sex, violence and debauchery become<br />

the rules of everyday life.<br />

Jake eats himself to death; Joe is killed by Trinity Moses in a boxing<br />

match; Jim runs up a massive bar bill and is unable to pay; his mistress,<br />

Jenny, refuses to use her own money to cover his debts, so Jim is sentenced<br />

to death and executed for non-payment of his bill. <strong>The</strong> citizens of<br />

Mahagonny are warned that they will be sent to Hell because of their sinful<br />

lives. However, they know they are already in Hell, and decide to continue<br />

their lives as before.<br />

Notes: This was a strong satire on capitalism and the state of Germany in<br />

the 1930s during the Weimar Republic. It was banned when the Nazis<br />

came to power, and Brecht and Weill were forced to flee Germany to<br />

escape imprisonment. <strong>The</strong> first British production was at Sadler’s Wells in<br />

1963 and was much praised. This new version was generally heavily<br />

criticised for being too gimmicky, too pretty, over-amplified, and lacking<br />

the spirit of corruption and decay which was the hallmark of the original<br />

pre-Nazi German version.<br />

Lesley Garrett as Jenny


FAME<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Cambridge <strong>The</strong>atre, June 27 th (526 Performances)<br />

Music: Steve Margoshes<br />

Lyrics: Jacques Levy<br />

Book: David de Silva & Jose Fernandez<br />

Director: Runar Borge<br />

Choreographer: Lars Bethke<br />

Musical Director:<br />

Producer: Michael White<br />

Cast: Scott Sherrin (Tyrone), Sonia Swaby (Mabel), Gemma Wardle (Serena),<br />

Richard Dempsey (Nick), Loraine Velez (Carmen), Josefina Gabrielle (Iris),<br />

Jonathan Aris, Nicola Bolton, Alastair Willis, Miguel Brown, Vivien Parry,<br />

Harry Landis, Bill Champion<br />

Songs: Hard Work, I Want to Make Magic, Can’t Keep it Down, Tyrone’s Rap, <strong>The</strong>re She Goes, Let’s Play a Love<br />

Scene, Dancing on the Sidewalk, In L.A. (<strong>The</strong> title song, “Fame”, by Dean Pitchford & Michael Gore was<br />

interpolated)<br />

Story: Based on the 1980 film by Alan Parker, this was the story of students at the Manhattan High School for the<br />

Performing Arts. <strong>Over</strong> the four years of their college careers, this charted the lives, trials and romances of a group<br />

of teenagers – high-born and low, gay, straight, Puerto Rican, black, white – and all fiercely ambitious to achieve<br />

fame in the world of showbiz.<br />

Notes: Following its original film and spin-off TV series, the critics thought the show was too predictable and<br />

clichéd - dancer with an eating disorder, student with drug problem, girl in love with boy who might be gay,<br />

teacher passionate about Mozart dealing with a class that wants to rap – and was just an excuse for dance numbers<br />

and songs not as good as the original soundtrack. It ran for more than a year in <strong>London</strong> run and then underwent a<br />

successful UK tour which was to make a few return visits to the West End over the next years.<br />

THE MUSIC MAN (1 st Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Open Air <strong>The</strong>atre, July 26 th – September 4 th (Limited<br />

season)<br />

Music: Meredith Willson<br />

Lyrics & Book: Meredith Willson<br />

Director: Ian Talbot<br />

Choreographer: Lisa Kent<br />

Musical Director: Catherine Jayes<br />

<strong>1995</strong><br />

5<br />

Cast: Brian Cox (Harold Hill), Liz Robertson (Marian Paroo),<br />

John Challis (Mayor Shinn), Anny Tobin (Mrs Paroo),<br />

Nick Holder (Marcellus Washburn), Adam Goldsmith/Anthony<br />

Hamblin/Simon Humphrey (Winthrop Paroo)<br />

This production subsequently went on a UK tour.<br />

Notes: Original <strong>London</strong> run: Adelphi, March 1961<br />

Photo by Alastair Muir<br />

HAPPY END (2 nd Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Bridewell <strong>The</strong>atre, August 11 th – September 2 nd (Limited season)<br />

Music: Kurt Weill<br />

Lyrics: Bertolt Brecht<br />

Book: Dorothy Lane<br />

Director: Gordon McDougall<br />

Choreographer: Gillian Gregory<br />

Cast: Annette Yeo (Lillian Holliday), Peter Polycarpou (Bill Cracker), Mark White (Sam Wurlitzer),<br />

Phillip Pellew (Rev. Jimmy Dexter), Karen Davies, Gregory Cross, Brett Forrest<br />

Performed in the Michael Feingold translation.<br />

Notes: See original production: Royal Court, March 1965; First revival: Lyric <strong>The</strong>atre, August 1975


CAVALCADE (1 st Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Sadler’s Wells, August 16 th – September 2 nd<br />

Music & Lyrics: Noel Coward<br />

Director: Dan Crawford<br />

Choreographer: Elizabeth Blake<br />

Musical Director: Michael Lavine<br />

<strong>1995</strong><br />

6<br />

Cast: Gabrielle Drake (Jane Marryott), Jeremy Clyde (Robert Marryott),<br />

Nicky Goldie (Mrs Bridges), Scott Morgan (Alfred Bridges), Rosalind<br />

Bailey, Lisa Bowerman, Steffan Boje, Jon Peterson, Caroline Oliver,<br />

Penelope Woodman, Ian McLarnon, Siv Klynderud, Virginia Courtney,<br />

Terri Lewis, Nigel Denham<br />

Songs: Twentieth Century Blues, Love of my Dreams, <strong>The</strong> Mirabelle Waltz<br />

(Interpolated: Soldiers of the Queen, If You Were the Only Girl in the<br />

World, Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty, Keep the Home Fires Burning.<br />

Story: This epic production covers three decades in the life of the Marryott<br />

family and their servants, starting in 1900 and ending on New Year’s Eve, 1929. <strong>The</strong> family is caught up in<br />

such events as the Relief of Mafeking, the death of Queen Victoria, the sinking of the Titanic and World War 1.<br />

Popular songs of at the time of each event were interwoven into the score, which also included original music<br />

by Noel Coward.<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> original premiere in 1931 at Drury Lane involved great spectacle, massive sets and a professional<br />

cast of over 200 including Mary Claire, Edward Sinclair, John Mills, Irene Browne, Una O’Connor, Arthur<br />

McCrae and Moyra Nugent . <strong>The</strong> show was very successful and ran for almost a year. Because of its size and<br />

enormous production costs, it has never been revived on anything like its original scale. <strong>The</strong> work provided the<br />

idea for the 1970s television series “Upstairs Downstairs”.<br />

This revival had started at Bromley and was part of an extensive UK tour. In each city the basic professional<br />

cast of 15 people would be augmented by hundreds of local amateurs and a large number of children, with<br />

several teams of children in each venue because of licensing restrictions. It required an extremely complex<br />

system of rehearsals dealing with the ever-changing cast of supernumaries. <strong>The</strong> Sadler’s Wells production<br />

used 275 extras.<br />

A LITTLE NIGHT MUSIC (2 nd Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Olivier <strong>The</strong>atre, September 26 th – August 31 st 1996 (Repertoire)<br />

Music & Lyrics: Stephen Sondheim<br />

Book: Hugh Wheeler<br />

Director: Sean Mathias<br />

Choreographer: Wayne McGregor<br />

Musical Director: Paddy Cunneen<br />

Producer: Royal National <strong>The</strong>atre<br />

Cast: Judi Dench (Desirée),<br />

Laurence Guittard (Frederik) ,<br />

Sian Phillips (Mme Armfeldt),<br />

Brendan O’Hea (Henrik),<br />

Issy van Ryndwyck (Petra),<br />

Lambert Wilson (Count Malcolm),<br />

Patricia Hodge (Charlotte),<br />

Joanna Riding (Anne),<br />

Claire Cox (Fredrika)<br />

Notes: See original <strong>London</strong> run:<br />

Adelphi, April 1975<br />

First revival: Piccadilly<br />

<strong>The</strong>atre, 1989<br />

Judi Dench<br />

Photo by Michael Le Poer Trench


<strong>1995</strong><br />

JOLSON THE MUSICAL<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Victoria Palace, October 26 th (580 Performances)<br />

Music: Various<br />

Book: Francis Essex & Rob Bettinson<br />

Original idea: Michael Freedland<br />

Director: Rob Bettinson<br />

Choreographer: Tudor Davies<br />

Musical Director: John Evans<br />

Producer: Paul Elliott, Laurie Mansfield & Greg Smith<br />

7<br />

Cast: Brian Conley (Al Jolson), Sally Ann Triplett (Ruby Keeler),<br />

John Bennett (Louis Epstein), John Conroy (Frankie Holmes),<br />

Brian Greene (Lee Shubert), Gareth Williams (Harry Cohn),<br />

David Bacon (Sam Warner)<br />

Songs: Swanee, Sonny Boy, My Mammy, By the Light of the<br />

Silvery Moon, You Made Me Love You, I’m Just Wild About<br />

Harry, About a Quarter to Nine<br />

Story: <strong>The</strong> real life-story of Al Jolson, depicting his childlike<br />

desperation need to please in his extravagant stage presentations, but having the courage to take on the warts<br />

and all. Privately Jolson was an ego with tonsils – a man who could ruthlessly steal<br />

other peoples’ songs, hijack their careers and destroy their affections. <strong>The</strong> story<br />

opens in the 1920s with his enormous success on Broadway and the first talking<br />

pictures and tells of his monstrous behaviour to his agent, managers and his much<br />

abused third wife, Ruby Keeler. <strong>The</strong> second act moves to the 1940s when his career<br />

is in decline until Hollywood films a totally false bio-pic, “<strong>The</strong> Jolson Story” and he<br />

stages a legendary “comeback” at the Radio City Music Hall.<br />

Notes: This was a complete triumph for Brian Conley, and there was much praise<br />

for Sally Ann Triplett in her first major West End role. <strong>The</strong>re was one number in<br />

black-face, potentially controversial, though ironically in the same theatre where the<br />

Black & White Minstrels had reigned for some ten years!<br />

PRISONER OF CELL BLOCK H – THE MUSICAL<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Queen’s <strong>The</strong>atre, October 30 th (88 Performances)<br />

Music & Lyrics: Don Battye & Peter Pinne<br />

Director: David McVicar<br />

Choreographer: Peter Titus<br />

Musical Director: Andrew Jarrett<br />

Producer: Helen Montagu<br />

Cast: Lily Savage (Herself), Maggie Kirkpatrick (Joan Ferguson),<br />

Penny Morrell (<strong>The</strong> Governor), Liz Smith (Minnie), Alison Jiear (Mrs Austin),<br />

Sara Stephens (Patsy), Terry Neason, Emma Kershaw, Jeffrey Perry.<br />

Songs: <strong>The</strong> Freak, Life on the Inside, Top Dog, Gimme a Man, Twinset and Pearls<br />

Notes: <strong>The</strong> cult Australian TV soap set in a women’s prison was re-created as a<br />

camp musical which dispensed with any seriousness, kept the wobbly sets and daft plot, added some witty<br />

songs, and ended up as a gloriously hilarious show for some critics – and as a complete load of tacky<br />

amateurish rubbish for others. Liverpool’s own Lily Savage (Paul O’Grady) has been wrongly jailed for<br />

prostitution, theft and murder whilst on holiday Down Under – accused of stealing a fondue set. Joan “ the<br />

Freak” Ferguson (from the original TV cast) is a leather-clad jackbooted prison warder with a compulsive<br />

fondness for strip-searching the prisoners. British actress, Liz Smith, plays a mad old lady doing bird pottering<br />

around in a dishevelled and confused state. Such plot as there was involved Joan Ferguson attempting to poison<br />

the Governor’s tea in order to take over control of the prison to show the prisoners some “real discipline”


MACK AND MABEL<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Piccadilly <strong>The</strong>atre, November 7 th<br />

(270 Performances)<br />

Music & Lyrics: Jerry Herman<br />

Book: Michael Stewart<br />

Director: Paul Kerryson<br />

Choreographer: Michael Smuin<br />

Musical Director: Julian Kelly<br />

Cast: Howard McGillan (Mack Sennett),<br />

Caroline O’Connor (Mabel Normand),<br />

Kathryn Evans (Lottie), Philip Herbert (Fatty Arbuckle),<br />

Jonathan D. Ellis, Graham Hubbard, Alan Mosley<br />

<strong>1995</strong><br />

8<br />

Songs: I Won’t Send Roses, Tap Your Troubles Away,<br />

Movies Were Movies, Time Heals Everything, I Promise<br />

You a Happy Ending, Mack and Mabel, Hit ‘Em on the<br />

Head<br />

Howard McGillan & Caroline O’Connor<br />

Story: Told in flashback from the year 1938 when Mack<br />

Sennett is leaving the movie-business for good, this recounts his earliest days in silent movies, and how he took the<br />

sandwich-delivery girl, Mabel Normand, and put her into pictures, making a star of her. However, their private<br />

and professional relationship didn’t work out, and eventually she left him when offers of<br />

better work came along.<br />

Notes: This had been a spectacular two month flop on Broadway in 1974, despite leading<br />

stars Robert Preston and Bernadette Peters, directed by Gower Champion. It had<br />

occasional touring and stock revivals in America but seemed unlikely to come to the West<br />

End. In 1984 the Olympic ice skaters Torvill and Dean used the overture as music for<br />

their gold-medal winning performance, and then the radio disc-jockey David Jacobs<br />

began promoting the album, claiming, quite rightly, it was one of the very best and most<br />

ignored of musical scores. Finally, 21 years after its Broadway premiere, a production<br />

was mounted at Leicester Haymarket and brought into the West End. <strong>The</strong> book had been<br />

revised to create a happy ending (in the original Mabel Normand died), and some new<br />

songs were added, but the book proved to be the problem. <strong>The</strong> songs were great, yet the<br />

show didn’t really hang together. It managed a seven month run during which Howard<br />

McGillan was replaced with James Smillie.<br />

COMPANY (1 st Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Donmar Warehouse, December 13 th (93 Performances)<br />

Transferred to Albery <strong>The</strong>atre March13 th 1996 (124 Performances)<br />

Music & Lyrics: Stephen Sondheim<br />

Book: George Furth<br />

Director: Sam Mendes<br />

Musical Director: Paddy Cunneen<br />

Cast: Adrian Lester (Robert),<br />

Sheila Gish (Joanne),<br />

Kiran Hocking (Kathy),<br />

Rebecca Front (Sarah), Clive Rowe,<br />

Clare Burt, Gareth Snook, Liza Sadovy, Teddy<br />

Kempner, Sophie Thompson, Michael Simkins, Anna Francolini, Hannah James<br />

Notes: This revival was hugely praised, especially for Adrian Lester’s central<br />

performance.<br />

Original <strong>London</strong> run: Her Majesty’s, January 1972<br />

Adrian Lester<br />

Photo by Mark Douet


RETURN TO THE FORBIDDEN PLANET (1 st Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Shaftesbury <strong>The</strong>atre December 19 th – January 13 th 1996<br />

Music: Various<br />

Book: Bob Carlton<br />

Director: Peter Rowe<br />

Choreographer:<br />

Musical Director:<br />

Producer: Andre Ptaszinski & Pola Jones Associates<br />

Cast: Alex Kelly (Miranda), Karen Mann<br />

This was a brief Christmas season stop-over for the touring production.<br />

Notes: Original <strong>London</strong> production: Cambridge <strong>The</strong>atre, September 1989<br />

<strong>1995</strong><br />

9<br />

SOUTH PACIFIC (2 nd Revival)<br />

<strong>London</strong> run: Drill Hall, December 12 th – January 20 th<br />

Music: Richard Rodgers<br />

Lyrics: Oscar Hammerstein II<br />

Book: Hammerstein & Joshua Logan.<br />

Director: Phil Willmott<br />

Choreographer: Jack Gunn<br />

Musical Director: Annemarie Lewis Thomas<br />

Producer: Steam Industry<br />

Cast: Joanna Maddison (Nellie Forbush), Peter Polycarpou (Emile),<br />

Christopher Howard (Lt. Cable), Patti Boulaye (Bloody Mary) ,<br />

John Marquez (Luther).<br />

With a 17 strong cast and a 6 piece band this was one of<br />

the earlier attempts to re-stage the standard large-scale<br />

West End and Broadway musicals as “chamber” pieces<br />

in small venues.<br />

Notes: See Original <strong>London</strong> Production,<br />

Drury Lane November 1951<br />

First revival: Prince of Wales <strong>The</strong>atre,<br />

January 1988<br />

Peter Polycarpou & Joanna Maddison<br />

Photo by Sheila Burnett

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